logo
Families of those killed in collapse of Georgia ferry dock sue companies that built it

Families of those killed in collapse of Georgia ferry dock sue companies that built it

Yahoo11-06-2025
ATLANTA (AP) — Relatives of seven people who drowned in waters off a Georgia island after a ferry dock walkway collapsed announced Wednesday they filed a lawsuit against the companies that designed and built it.
Dozens of people were standing on the metal walkway over the water between a ferry boat and a dock on Sapelo Island when it snapped in the middle. Many plunged into the water and got swept away by tidal currents, while others clung desperately to the hanging, fractured structure.
The tragedy Oct. 19 struck as about 700 people visited Sapelo Island for a celebration of the tiny Hogg Hummock community founded by enslaved people who were emancipated after the Civil War. Reachable only by boat, it's one of the few Gullah-Geechee communities remaining in the South, where slaves worked on isolated island plantations retained much of their African heritage.
'It was supposed to be a celebration of Black pride, but it became a day of great, great, great Black loss of humanity and life,' civil rights attorney Ben Crump, one of several lawyers behind the lawsuit, told an Atlanta news conference. 'We're filing this lawsuit to speak to that tragedy.'
Attorneys for the families of those killed and more than three dozen survivors say the 80-foot (24-meter) walkway was weak because of a lack of structural reinforcement, poor welding and failure by the Georgia firm that built it to follow design plans.
The walkway was 'so poorly designed and constructed that any competent construction professional should have recognized the flimsy and unstable nature of the gangway,' the lawsuit says.
Regina Brinson, one of the suing survivors, said she was on the crowded walkway when she heard a loud crack and saw family friend Carlotta McIntosh plunge into the water holding her walker. Brinson and her uncle, Isaiah Thomas, also fell. Brinson recalled prying her uncle's fingers from her shirt to avoid being dragged underwater. Both Thomas and McIntosh died.
'The pain doesn't get any easier whatsoever,' Brinson told the Atlanta news conference.
Kimberly Wood said she tumbled from the collapsed walkway clutching her 2-year-old daughter. Her older girl, 8, clung to the dangling walkway's railing.
Wood said she managed to tread water until she reached a life preserver tossed from the ferry boat. Her older daughter was rescued and treated for wounds to her hand, said Wood, who had an injured shoulder.
'I'm shaking now just taking about it,' said Wood, another plaintiff.
The lawsuit targets four private contractors hired to design and rebuild the ferry dock and walkway for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. The project was finished in 2021.
The walkway was fabricated by McIntosh County business Crescent Equipment Co. Its attorney, Clinton Fletcher, declined to comment. The project's general contractor, Virginia-based Centennial Contractors Enterprises, said by email that it doesn't comment on pending litigation. So did SSOE Group, which purchased an Atlanta design firm named as a defendant several years ago.
An engineering firm also named as a defendant did not immediately return a phone message Wednesday.
The lawsuit doesn't target the Department of Natural Resources or any other Georgia state agency. It says the department relied on its private contractors to ensure the walkway was safely built, which was "beyond the scope of the DNR's internal expertise and qualifications.'
The agency told The Associated Press last year that the walkway should have been able to support the weight of 320 people. About 40 people were standing on it when it snapped.
'There was supposed to be a certified professional engineer that signed off on that part of the project and that was neglected," said Chadrick Mance, a Savannah attorney representing nine of the injured.
Filed in Gwinnett County State Court in metro Atlanta, the lawsuit seeks unspecified damages for negligence, wrongful deaths and personal injuries.
The cause of the collapse remains under investigation by the state officials, said Haley Chafin, a spokesperson for the Department of Natural Resources. State Attorney General Chris Carr also tapped a private engineering firm to perform an independent investigation.
___
Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia.
___
Kramon is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Kramon on X: @charlottekramon.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hillary Clinton approved plan hatched by campaign aides to ‘smear' Trump with Russia collusion: declassified docs
Hillary Clinton approved plan hatched by campaign aides to ‘smear' Trump with Russia collusion: declassified docs

New York Post

time10 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Hillary Clinton approved plan hatched by campaign aides to ‘smear' Trump with Russia collusion: declassified docs

WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton approved a plan hatched by a campaign adviser to 'smear' then-candidate Donald Trump with false claims of Russian collusion and distract from her own mounting emails scandal during the 2016 election, according to explosive intelligence files declassified Thursday. The plan included 'raising the theme of 'Putin's support for Trump'' and 'subsequently steering public opinion toward the notion that it needs to equate' the Russian leader's political influence campaign with actual interference in election infrastructure. 3 Hillary Clinton approved a plan to 'smear' Trump with Russia collusion, according to declassified docs. Getty Images Advertisement 3 Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Wednesday, July 23, 2025, in Washington. AP 'Clinton approved a plan proposed by one of her foreign policy advisors, Julianne Smith, to 'smear Donald Trump by magnifying the scandal tied to the intrusion by the Russian special services in the pre-election process to benefit the Republican candidate,'' one of the declassified memos read. Special counsel John Durham uncovered the information during a multi-year probe into intelligence activities during the 2016 election. Advertisement Attorney General Pam Bondi, FBI Director Kash Patel and other members of the US Intelligence Community declassified the files from Durham's probe at the request of Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa.). 'Based on the Durham annex, the Obama FBI failed to adequately review and investigate intelligence reports showing the Clinton campaign may have been ginning up the fake Trump-Russia narrative for Clinton's political gain, which was ultimately done through the Steele Dossier and other means,' Grassley said in a statement. 'These intelligence reports and related records, whether true or false, were buried for years. History will show that the Obama and Biden administration's law enforcement and intelligence agencies were weaponized against President Trump,' he added. 3 AP Advertisement 'This political weaponization has caused critical damage to our institutions and is one of the biggest political scandals and cover-ups in American history. The new Trump administration has a tremendous responsibility to the American people to fix the damage done and do so with maximum speed and transparency.' The Post reached out to reps for Clinton and Smith for comment.

Viral video shows school showdown between a mom and her daughter's ‘bully'
Viral video shows school showdown between a mom and her daughter's ‘bully'

New York Post

time10 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Viral video shows school showdown between a mom and her daughter's ‘bully'

A fed-up mom, frustrated that her child's school was seemingly doing nothing to stop her daughter from being cyber-bullied, has taken matters into her own hands and decided to confront her child's alleged bullies herself. An Auckland-based mom of four, shared a video of the confrontation on TikTok, where it has now amassed over 500,000 views. Advertisement The footage shows the mother walking into a room as an adult woman tells her to 'Stop'. She bypasses her, and begins speaking to a girl, while two other adults believed to be teachers stand between them. 'Why are you posting my daughter online? Huh?' she asked the young student, who was seated behind one of the teachers and whose face was blurred. One of the teachers tells the mother, 'This is not the place,' but she repeats her question to the girl: 'Why are you posting my daughter online?' Advertisement The footage shows the mother walking into a room as an adult woman tells her to 'Stop'. TikTok / @sapphiremusix 'Do you know how many people die from suicide because of that?' she continues. 'Don't fat shame my daughter online.' When an adult threatens to call the police, the mother encourages them, saying she has 'proof' to show that her daughter's classmates are bullying her online. Meanwhile, the alleged bully remained silent, even as the mother revealed the online insults directed at her daughter included calling her a 'fat hippo'. Advertisement 'I have all the screenshots, you sent it to everybody to post,' she claimed. It is not known which school this occurred at. As one of the adults tries to diffuse the situation, the mom warns: 'If I have to come back, it won't be pretty,' before she walks away. While she admitted in the caption that she 'should have waited' for parent-teacher night, she said she 'couldn't help' but defend her daughter. Advertisement 'F–k bullying, f–k fat shaming. If you ain't teaching your kids that bullying is not okay, WTF (are) you doing? And I'd do it again,' the caption read. In the comments, most people praised the mom for dealing with the issue herself. 'This is exactly how it should be handled … Go you mamma!' said one comment with 7,000 likes. 'We stand with you mama!' another wrote. 'That's the way, stand up against bullying! Parents of bullies – do better,' a third wrote. 'Sometimes, parents of bullied children get so fed up that this is how they deal with the situation,' a fourth said. Meanwhile, the alleged bully remained silent, even as the mother revealed the online insults directed at her daughter included calling her a 'fat hippo'. TikTok / @sapphiremusix But some said she was just as bad as the bully. Advertisement 'You're doing the same thing to the poor kid, shocking behavior as a parent,' claimed one. 'It's so scary how there are people out there advocating for anti-bullying and looking out for victims, but then figure that bullying bullies back is the solution?' someone else said. has reached out to the mother for comment. It comes after an Adelaide mom went viral in February for storming her daughter's classroom and confronting her alleged bully. Advertisement The footage of the moment shows the woman screaming violent threats at the student. 'You want to f–king go, bitch? You want to f–king go? You ever f–king talk to my daughter again,' she yelled as her husband attempts to push her away. 'You ever –king mess with my daughter again I'll slit your –king throat. I'll be waiting for you. And that smart little **** over there, yeah, you know what, you're just jealous because you're a **** ****. You're a **** ****.' Police were investigating the matter.

Pope to bestow one of Catholic Church's highest honors on Anglican convert John Henry Newman
Pope to bestow one of Catholic Church's highest honors on Anglican convert John Henry Newman

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Pope to bestow one of Catholic Church's highest honors on Anglican convert John Henry Newman

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Leo XIV on Thursday decided to declare St. John Henry Newman a 'doctor' of the church, bestowing one of the Catholic Church's highest honors on the deeply influential 19th century Anglican convert who remains a unifying figure among conservatives and progressives. The Vatican said Leo confirmed the opinion of the Vatican's saint-making office during an audience Thursday with its prefect, Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, and would make the decision official soon. The designation is one of the most significant decisions of Leo's young papacy and also carries deep personal meaning: Newman was strongly influenced by St. Augustine of Hippo, the inspiration of Leo's Augustinian religious order and Leo's namesake, Pope Leo XIII, made Newman a Catholic cardinal in 1879 after his conversion. Newman, a theologian and poet, is admired by Catholics and Anglicans alike because he followed his conscience at great personal cost. When he defected from the Church of England to the Catholic Church in 1845, he lost friends, work and even family ties, believing the truth he was searching for could only be found in the Catholic faith. The title of doctor is reserved for people whose writings have greatly served the universal Catholic Church. Only three-dozen people have been given the title over the course of the church's 2,000-year history, including the 5th century St. Augustine, St. Francis de Sales and St. Teresa of Avila. Unifying figure Newman experts said the decision to add the British theologian to their ranks was deeply significant, given Newman's contribution to Christian understanding of conscience, truth and education — and his near-universal appeal to progressives and conservatives alike. Jack Valero, who served as a spokesman for Newman's 2010 beatification and 2019 canonization ceremonies, said he had never come across anyone who had a problem with him. If back then Newman was the perfect unifying figure for a polarized church, he is even more so now, for a new pope who has made unity a core priority of his pontificate, Valero said. "You know, I look at Pope Leo and I hear him say, 'We need unity, we need peace,' and so on and I think, 'Here's the man who's going to make it happen,'' he said in an interview. The first American pope vowed during his May 18 installation Mass that he would work for unity so that the church could become a force for peace in a troubled world. It was a message of pacification after the sometimes turbulent pontificate of Pope Francis exacerbated divisions in the church. Leo has also repeatedly affirmed his identity as an Augustinian, deeply inspired by the teachings of the 5th century theologian. Many scholars have long considered Newman to be the Augustine of the modern era. Newman's conversion Anglicans split from Rome in 1534 when English King Henry VIII was refused a marriage annulment. In the centuries that followed, Catholics were fined, discriminated against and killed for their faith. Newman was one of the founders of the so-called Oxford Movement of the 1830s, which sought to revive certain Roman Catholic doctrines in the Church of England by looking back to the traditions of the earliest Christian church. But he gave up a brilliant academic career at Oxford University and the pulpit of the university church to convert to Catholicism. As a Catholic, he became one of the most influential theologians of the era, bringing elements of the Anglican church into his new faith tradition. He died in Britain in 1890. Newman's path to being declared a doctor in the Catholic Church has been exceptionally quick. Pope Benedict XVI beatified him during a visit to Britain in 2010 and Pope Francis made him a saint in 2019, with then-Prince Charles in attendance. Francis declared two doctors of the church during his 12-year pontificate — St. Irenaeus and St. Gregory of Narek — and was on the receiving end of a concerted push by English-speaking bishops to add Newman to their ranks.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store